Australia Flashcards

1
Q

What production methods are used in Australia and what styles are made?

A

Trad, transfer, tank, carbonation

Champagne blends with trad, tank with Glera, Moscato, sparkling Shiraz, Pet Nat

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2
Q

Which regions are suited to producing grapes for trad method?

A

Cooler –> Tasmania, Yarra Valley (Domaine Chandon), Adelaide Hills, high altitude sites in Victoria and NSW

  • -> Ripening –> acid, potential alcohol, ripe but med intensity fruit
  • -> Lower yields –> price
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3
Q

Describe the terroir of Tasmania?

A
  • Cool-moderate (?) –> south is cooler (can be colder than Champagne)
  • Piper’s River: exposed to cold Southern Ocean
  • Tamar River: sheltered from Southern Ocean, harvests two weeks before Piper
  • Coal Valley: warm
  • Southerly latitude –> sunlight intensity
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4
Q

What are the main climatic hazards in Tasmania?

A
  • Spring frost
  • High rainfall
  • Coulure
  • Botrytis
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5
Q

Are wines generally produced within Tasmania’s sub-zones?

A

No

  1. Wine is often blended between warmer and cooler regions for balance + volume
  2. Sub-zone labelling rules have not been agreed - wine marketed as Tasmania
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6
Q

Describe where grapes for inexpensive wine is grown and the vineyard management necessary in these places.

A

Riverland, Riverina, Murray-Darling –> labelled SEA

Irrigation is essential - hot and dry climate

Fruit picked early - alcohol, acid, over-ripe flavours

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7
Q

Compare yields in cool and warm parts of Australia

A

2-3x higher in warmer parts than cooler –> price ~25% of grapes for super-premium wines

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8
Q

Where is fruit for sparkling Shiraz grown? Compare picking and yield.

A

Warm areas - Victoria, Barossa, McLaren Vale

Grapes picked at same time as for still wines - style need richness / intensity

Yields moderate - high for premium to inexpensive wines

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9
Q

Describe the winemaking process for Traditional Method in Australia.

A
  • Several styles
  • Time on lees varies - prem producers will have similar lees ageing to Champagne, best producers use >3yrs e.g. Jansz and Arras, Late Disgorged has >6 yrs
  • Many large producers press on island and send refrigerated juice / base wine to specialised facilities on the mainland
  • Small producers make wine on island with use of hand and less specialised equipment
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10
Q

Describe the style of a typical Australian trad method.

A

Med(+) - high acid
Med ABV
Med(-) - med(+) body and intensity - depends on style and lees ageing
Citrus fruit, apple, autolytic character
Malo optional

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11
Q

Describe the grapes used for Transfer, Tank and Carbonation wine in Australia and describe the range of style produced.

A
  • Usually blend from different regions including range of cool and warm climates
  • Range of aromatic and non-aromatic varieties
  • Med-med(+) acid
  • Dry - med-sweet
  • Low-med ABV
  • Fruity with citrus, peach, apricot, grapey
  • Little or not autolysis
  • Main brands: Brown Brothers, Jacob’s Creek, Yellowglen
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12
Q

How is Sparkling Shiraz made?

A
  • Still red fermented as usual including malo
  • Oak maturation optional
  • Trad method for premium
  • Transfer, tank, carbo for mid-priced and inexpensive
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13
Q

Describe the style and quality of Austrlian Shiraz.

A
  • Deep colour: ruby - garnet
  • Med(-)-med acid
  • Med-high alcohol
  • Med, ripe, soft tannin
  • > 20g/L of RS to balance tannin and alcohol
  • Med - full body
  • Med - pronounced
  • Style range from fruity to savoury (extended oak maturation)
  • Usually released after 1-2 yrs - some examples of lees aged wines
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14
Q

Describe the production and style of sparkling Moscato.

A
  • Blend of regions - usually warmer
  • Carbo: inexpensive - mid-priced
  • Tank: mid-priced
  • Med acid
  • Off-dry-sweet
  • Fruity and grapey
  • Acceptable - good
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15
Q

Where is Australian Prosecco made, how is it made and describe its typical style?

A
  • King Valley - Victoria
  • Tank method - most producers are small and quality focussed, some carbo
  • Med(+) acid
  • Off-dry-medium dry
  • Med alcohol
  • Light-med body
  • White peach
  • Good - VG
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16
Q

When was the term Prosecco first used? When did Italy change the name of the variety? How does it impact exports of Australia Prosecco?

A

2004 - Australia Prosecco released by Dal Zotto

2009 - Italy changes grapes to Glera and adopts Prosecco as the PDO

When exported to EU, must be labelled Glera

Legal battle over exports to other regions such as China

17
Q

Where is Pet Nat made and describe its typical style.

A

Various regions from various grapes

Small quantities range of styles

  • Varying pressure from slightly to fully sparkling
  • Cloudy
  • Med(+) acid
  • Med alcohol
  • Light-med(+) body
  • Med - pronounced
  • Fruit and yeasty character
18
Q

To what extent are Australian producers regulated when making sparkling wine?

A

Not constrained - wine laws do not prescribe grape varieties within GIs –> innovation e.g. sparkling Shiraz

19
Q

Describe trends in terms of production structure.

A

Range from small artisans to major corporations

Success of Tasmania has resulted in acquisitions e.g. Brown Brothers purchased Tamar Ridge, Accolade owns House of Arras and Bay of Fires

20
Q

How much Australian sparkling wine is made and where is it sold?

A

6% of total production is sparkling –> 66 million litres

80% sold domestically - increased demand for Prosecco and Moscato, reduced demand for SS (other options, lower demand for high ABV wines, interest in foreign wine) , more demand for Pet Nat
20% sold export - growing